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One of the most important tools to add to your toolbelt as an advocate or a researcher is the power of storytelling. Sharing stories of lived experiences is a powerful tool that can evoke empathy, compassion, and an understanding of different walks of life.

Today, Jeiri is joined by Morénike Giwa Onaiwu, an educator, writer, public speaker, parent, global advocate, a professional and disabled non-binary woman of color, and daughter of immigrants. They are also a member of the Autistic Researcher Review Board for the Autism Intervention Research Network on Physical Health (AIR-P) project. She is passionate about human rights, justice, and inclusion with her vast advocacy work related to HIV awareness, gender disability, racial equity, and more.

Morénike joins the show today to share their expertise on storytelling, especially when it comes to including lived experiences in research and writing. They share their knowledge on researching and how new researchers can frame their process. Jeiri and Morénike both tell their stories of being a young advocate as a bilingual person of color. They have an important discussion on the need for respectful, affirming, and accurate language and the difference between person-first language versus identity-first language.

This is an eye-opening conversation about the immersive power of storytelling and how stories fuel change within advocacy and research. Tune in and get ready to be inspired.
View all episodes and transcripts at http://www.aucd.org/podcast
This episode was funded by the Administration for Community Living through technical assistance contract # HHSP233201600066C. The contents do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Administration on Community Living, US Department of Health and Human Services, or the US Government.

Produced by Adode Media; a full-service podcast production agency.

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Chapters

1. Using Storytelling to Connect Research and Lived Experience (00:00:00)

2. How Morenike includes lived experiences and research (00:01:14)

3. Unlocking your brain in the research and writing stages (00:03:58)

4. How the way Morenike researches changes her work as an advocate (00:05:12)

5. The immersive power of storytelling (00:08:22)

6. Being a young advocate, becoming a leader in the forefront, and sharing stories (00:09:46)

7. How experiences as a bilingual person of color shapes advocacy (00:11:51)

8. Morenike’s biggest challenges with the growth in her work (00:14:03)

9. The importance of respectful, affirming, and accurate language (00:15:32)

10. Person first language vs identity first language (00:17:05)

11. Recognizing how advocacy gives power to people and their stories when it comes to change (00:22:03)

12. Advice for new researchers wanting to frame their research (00:23:47)

24 episodes